Suggested Answers below

Have you been making many mistakes? If they are in vocabulary, make a note of troublesome words in your exercise book (hopefully you have one!). K-words like ‘kio’, ‘kiu’, ‘kial’ often cause confusion, so invent ways of remembering, e.g. ‘kio’ means ‘whot‘ while ‘kiu‘ asks ‘which one‘ are ‘U‘. ‘Kial‘ means ‘why‘ – asking for a ‘rationALe‘. You don’t like these? Make up your own! Keep a record of them. Are you correcting mistakes when necessary? The ‘n-ending’ is a constant bugbear for speakers of English, Irish and French. These languages have a more restricted word order instead. English has an accusative for some pronouns – he and him, we and us and some others. Esperanto uses the ‘n-ending’ for clarity, enjoys a much freer word order, gains tidy expressions with ‘movement’ prepositions and even does without prepositions in others.

Please attempt the exercises above before consulting the material below